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Cytokine-independent growth and clonal expansion of a primary human CD8+T-cell clone following retroviral transduction with the IL-15 gene

Authors :
Hsu, Cary
Jones, Stephanie A.
Cohen, Cyrille J.
Zheng, Zhili
Kerstann, Keith
Zhou, Juhua
Robbins, Paul F.
Peng, Peter D.
Shen, Xinglei
Gomes, Theotonius J.
Dunbar, Cynthia E.
Munroe, David J.
Stewart, Claudia
Cornetta, Kenneth
Wangsa, Danny
Ried, Thomas
Rosenberg, Steven A.
Morgan, Richard A.
Source :
Blood; June 2007, Vol. 109 Issue: 12 p5168-5177, 10p
Publication Year :
2007

Abstract

Malignancies arising from retrovirally transduced hematopoietic stem cells have been reported in animal models and human gene therapy trials. Whether mature lymphocytes are susceptible to insertional mutagenesis is unknown. We have characterized a primary human CD8+T-cell clone, which exhibited logarithmic ex vivo growth in the absence of exogenous cytokine support for more than 1 year after transduction with a murine leukemia virus–based vector encoding the T-cell growth factor IL-15. Phenotypically, the clone was CD28−, CD45RA−, CD45RO+, and CD62L−, a profile consistent with effector memory T lymphocytes. After gene transfer with tumor-antigen–specific T-cell receptors, the clone secreted IFN-γ upon encountering tumor targets, providing further evidence that they derived from mature lymphocytes. Gene-expression analyses revealed no evidence of insertional activation of genes flanking the retroviral insertion sites. The clone exhibited constitutive telomerase activity, and the presence of autocrine loop was suggested by impaired cell proliferation following knockdown of IL-15Rα expression. The generation of this cell line suggests that nonphysiologic expression of IL-15 can result in the long-term in vitro growth of mature human T lymphocytes. The cytokine-independent growth of this line was a rare event that has not been observed in other IL-15 vector transduction experiments or with any other integrating vector system. It does not appear that the retroviral vector integration sites played a role in the continuous growth of this cell clone, but this remains under investigation.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00064971 and 15280020
Volume :
109
Issue :
12
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Blood
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs57106501
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1182/blood-2006-06-029173